Thursday, November 17, 2022

AT WATCH IN THE FIELDS OF THE LORD

 

From Linda Lee Greene Author/Artist

As the daylight hours grow shorter with the natural rotation of Earth, and even more so with the resumption of standard time in my neck of the woods, the landscape has turned from luminous hues of summertime greens to radiant shades of autumn golds and burgundies, and too soon, to winter’s promise of its black and white contrasts. More than likely, farmers in the Midwest USA have harvested their corn fields by now, but Google says that the foot-draggers have another week or so to get their crops gathered and stored or sent to market. If that is the case, the slowpokes will be picking frozen corn. Plump and fresh corn is of particular interest at this time of the looming high-holidays, and while it is a welcome side dish on dinner tables and pretty models for my watercolor painting (shown below), those things are not the only essential features of corn.

 

If we have paid attention, we are aware of corn’s silent presence in an almost endless array of consumer products. But I wager that a lot of lay persons know very little about corn’s shaggy stalks beyond their prominent place in fall decorations and as sentinels over the farm fields in which corn will reemerge next year. Savvy farmers understand the enormous role that corn stalks play in the entire growing process of the plant, and they must decide whether their removal at season’s end will impact positively or negatively on the health of the soil and the environment. For the good of the soil and the connective tissue of the ecosystem, typically only every other row of the stalks is baled and hauled away to be used in other ways such as bedding for farm animals and as a supplement to the livestock’s customary feed during the long and cold Midwest winters. An example of the every-other-row harvesting technique is shown in the photograph by my friend Rae Penn. This field of stacked corn stalks is in Adams County, Ohio, USA.


 

            Why leave any residue at all of crops in fields? Eons ago, farmers were apt to clear their fields entirely following the harvest. This was because the soil was still full of natural substances that provided nourishment essential for its health, which gave forth admirable yields. With the passage of time and the penchant of some farmers to overwork and overplant fields without replenishment measures taken, the soil became barren of the vital nutrients. With time and experience, workers of the soil figured out that leaving decomposing corn stalks in the fields fed the soil of necessary organic material to keep it viable. The corn stacks also act as a cover crop that help to hold back soil erosion during inclement weather conditions.

A second replenishment method is to reuse the corn stalks that served as bedding for livestock after it has been composted with the winter’s accumulation of the animal’s manure. This produces a nutrient-dense fertilizer, which is spread onto the fields.

The farmer’s system of recycling for purposes of frugality and mainly of replenishment ecology brings me back to my thoughts about the high-holidays before us. Among my family and friends, holiday gatherings are sources of emotional and spiritual replenishment for us just as surely as the corn stalks are nourishment for the farm fields that feed us.©

                                                               ***


 

BASKET OF CORN, watercolor by Linda Lee Greene

 

HOW TO COOK CORN IN THE HUSK

I am advised that cooking corn in the husk is the best and easiest way to get corn on the cob ready to plate. Its fans swear by it and will never struggle with the messy job of husking uncooked cobs of corn again. And be assured that once the corn on the cob is cooked, for some reason, the husks come off easier and cleaner than on raw husks. The next question is whether to grill, bake, boil, or microwave the corn on the cob, all of which can be done with the husks still attached to the cob.

 

If opting to grill, the husk actually protects the corn from burning. Place the cobs of corn in their husk directly on the grill for 15 minutes. Turn the cobs fairly often.

To bake corn on the cob, place them in the husk on a baking sheet in a preheated oven at 350F. Roast for 30 minutes.

The stovetop method requires bringing a pot of water to a boil and then placing the corn in the husk in the water. Boil for 10 minutes.

Based on my research, the hands down favorite method is to microwave corn on the cob in the husk. For 1 ear of corn in the husk, nuke on High for 4 minutes; 2 ears will require 7 minutes, 3 ears need 9 minutes, and 4 ears will need to nuke for 10 minutes.

Whether grilling, baking, boiling, or microwaving, allow the cobs to cool enough to handle, and then one by one cut off the very bottom of the husk at the place it is attached to the cob. Grasp the husk by the top, pull, and it will slide right off.

***

Multi-award-winning author, Linda Lee Greene’s GARDEN OF THE SPIRITS OF THE POTS: A Spiritual Odyssey is a novella in which ex-pat American Nicholas Plato relocates to Sydney, Australia to escape the mental torture of devastating losses back home. Strange encounters in Australia’s outback with an Indigenous potter reveal to Nicholas unexpected blessings and a new way of living. The novella is available in eBook and/or paperback. Just click the following blue link and it will take you straight to the page on Amazon on which you can purchase the book. https://www.amazon.com/GARDEN-SPIRITS-POTS-SPIRITUAL-ODYSSEY-ebook/dp/B09JM7YL6F/


 

#Farming, #Corn, #CornStalks, #CornStacks, #CornOnTheCob, #CornInTheHusk, #Harvest. #CornFields, #Thanksgiving, #Christmas, #HighHolidays, #Recycling, #SoilReplenishment, #LindaLeeGreene, #GardenOfTheSpiritsOfThePots

 

 

 

Tuesday, November 15, 2022

MEET MARINA SARDAROVA, ALSO KNOWN AS AUTHOR STELLA MAY

My friend, Marina Sardarova who writes under the pen-name of Stella May, accepted my invitation to answer a few of my questions about her life and work. It is my great pleasure to introduce you to her on my blog today. Just let me say that if you are in the mood to be swept away by some really good books, I highly recommend that you find your way to her work. To help you in that effort, purchase links to her books are listed below. –Linda Lee Greene Author/Artist

  

In 50 words or fewer, please tell readers what you want them to know about the personal you?

 


I was born in the sixties of the last century in a country that doesn’t exist anymore: the former Soviet Union. However, I am not Russian–I’m Armenian and proud of my heritage. My family and I immigrated to the USA in 1991. I live in Jacksonville, FL with my husband and son. Literature and music are my two great passions.

In 50 words or fewer, tell readers what you want them to know about the writer you?

I am a Gemini, so there are two of us. Literally. My name is Marina Sardarova. Stella May is my pen name. In many regards, we are very different, even though she is me. I am a shy person, introvert. She’s more daring, braver, and self-assured. I am no stranger to self-doubts. She knows exactly what she wants and goes for it. And she writes because she loves it and because she has stories inside of her.

What motivated you to begin writing?

A visceral need to tell a story brewing inside.

Do you shoot for a grand purpose and/or a message for readers in your work?

Frankly, I don’t think about a grand purpose while writing my books. But my main message is: love is everything.

Do you write in a specific genre, or in a range of genres?

My first trilogy ‘Once & Forever’ is a family saga, the story totally grounded in reality. My next book ‘Rhapsody in Dreams’ is a cross-genre between a real life romance and fantasy. My series ‘Upon A Time’ is a time-travel romance adventure. I always was drawn to the sprinkle of magic in a real life.

Tell readers about your latest book: Title, blurb, purchase link, jpeg of the cover.

What motivated you to write this book?

My latest book ‘Time& Again’ is book two of my time-travel series.


 

Blurb: Once the portal is closed, there’s no going back. Or forward. Or is there?

Nika has been back in her own time for months, but with the portal to 1909 closed, she fears Eli believes those terrible accusations. Suddenly Eli appears, but in order to live out their destiny, there is more than one emotional bridge to rebuild.

https://www.amazon.com/Time.../dp/B0B7ZKXHS3/ref=sr_1_1...

https://books2read.com/u/3n5lMK

https://play.google.com/.../details/Stella_May_Time_Again...

Do you have a work in progress (WIP)?  If so, please give readers a sneak peak of it?

The third book in the Upon A Time Series is titled ‘No Other Time’, and is currently in the editing phase. I hope to introduce readers to it before Christmas. In this book, two of my secondary characters step forward, taking a center stage. I hope the readers will enjoy reading this story as much as I loved writing it.

In your best dream for your future, where would you like to be both in your personal and writing life?

Right here, in my beautiful sunny Florida, with my two best men, my husband of 34 years, and my wonderful son, and writing my heart out.

In 10 words or fewer, please share with readers your personal motto? In other words, what gets you up in the morning and keeps you up and going?

I have two mottoes I live by. First one-- be yourself, everybody else is already taken. And second-- seek magic everywhere.

What gets me up and running? My family and my writing.

How do you prefer readers to contact you directly?

Via my email stellamay1205@gmail.com, or via my website

 www.stellamayauthor.com/contact

Is there anything else you want to share with readers?

Thank you for reading my books!

#StellaMay, #MarinaSardarova, #TimeTravelStories, #Romance, #UponATimeSeries, #NoOtherTime, #Once&Forever, #RhapsodyInDreams, #LindaLeeGreene, #AuthorArtist

 

Wednesday, November 9, 2022

LOVE, FOOD, AND MAGIC

 

Food, and Magic

Catherine Castle and Donald Hersh, writing as co-authors CD Hersh, share their optimistic outlook on living, based in large part on love, food, and magic. Always and ever in pursuit of a happily-ever-after ending, through their work and the example of their marriage, the couple points readers in at least one viable direction to get it for themselves. -Linda Lee Greene Author/Artist

  

LOVE, FOOD, AND MAGIC

 

From C.D. Hersh

 

Our book Can’t Stop the Music opens in Woodstock and is filled with musical references of the era and of food.

 


 Today we’re talking about love, food, and magic. Love was plentiful at Woodstock. Magic mushrooms were probably plentiful, also, but food not so much. The producers didn’t expect the overwhelming crowd that showed up and the vendors ran out of food in a very short time.

But you don’t have to worry about that, because we’ve got a special treat for you today.

As writers, we know that love and food go together like romance and a happily-ever-after ending. Maybe that’s why in most of our novels the hero and heroine share a meal of some sort. There’s just something magical about a special dinner with the one you love. Don’t you remember that special dinner, or dinners, with your honey? On the first dinner Catherine made for Donald she accidently fed him a toothpick—which he unwittingly ate. Trust us, we remember that!

Like most humans, we like to eat, and food works its way into our stories. In our book, Can’t Stop the Music (The Soul Mate Tree Book 2) the hero cooks an Italian meal for the heroine that is positively orgasmic. Can’t Stop the Music is a nostalgic romance set in Woodstock 1969 and contains a paranormal element. The paranormal involves a magic Soul Mate Tree that grants soul mates to deserving persons.

The Soul Mate tree is
An ancient legend spanning eras, continents, and worlds.
To some, it’s nothing more than a dream.
To others, a pretty fairytale handed down through the generations.
For those in critical need of their own happy ending, a gift.

And our heroine and hero are in definitely in need of a happy ending.

Speaking of happy, who doesn’t love a delicious pasta dish? We do, but pasta is something we don’t eat a lot of anymore because of the high carb content. Recently, we’ve begun experimenting with ways to make high-carb pasta meals friendlier, because we do miss our pasta. In the process, we’ve discovered things like lentil and soybean pastas that are great substitutes for wheat pasta. They have a high fiber to carb ratio, which not only puts more fiber in the diet, but slows the release of sugars into the blood stream, both which are great boons to people with insulin resistance issues. The soybean pasta is fantastic and has become our go-to pasta for spaghetti.

Unfortunately, we haven’t found a soybean lasagna. So, Catherine got creative and made a meatless version of lasagna that uses a smaller amount of lasagna on the bottom of the dish and substitutes sliced zucchini for the pasta in the other layers. Putting a single layer of pasta on the bottom provides the traditional taste of lasagna and helps the servings come out of the dish better, without the added high-glycemic carbohydrates. We made this lasagna recipe meatless, but you could use a meat sauce if you prefer. Bon appétit!


MUSHROOM ZUCCHINI LASAGNA

 Serves four

 2 sheets oven-ready lasagna pasta

½ jar (1 1/3 cups) spaghetti or marina sauce (any flavor you prefer)

2-3 oz. fresh baby spinach (2-3 handfuls)

1 8 oz. box sliced mushrooms

2 small zucchinis, sliced into scant 1/8 inch thick ribbons

1 cup shredded mozzarella cheese

12 tbsp. low-fat ricotta cheese

Trim ends of zucchinis until they fit inside a square 1-1/2 quart baking dish. Then slice zucchinis into scant 1/8 inch thick ribbons. Place on a plate and salt liberally both sides. Let stand about an hour to draw out the excess moisture. Rinse off salt and pat slices dry with a paper towel. Set aside.

Rinse mushrooms and place in a skillet or large saucepan. Using 2 sharp-bladed spatulas, coarsely chop mushrooms in the pan. (Alternately, you could use a knife and cutting board, but Catherine found this method to be quicker.) Sauté mushrooms in a couple tablespoons of water until the mushrooms darken and excess water from the fungi has appeared in the pan. Drain and set aside.

Fit the 2 sheets of pasta in the bottom of a square, 1-1/2 quart baking dish, breaking edges off as necessary so the pasta lays flat in the bottom. Remove pasta and broken pieces from the dish.

Pour 1/3 cup pasta sauce in the bottom of the dish and lay the pasta sheets and broken pieces on top.

On top of this base, layer 1/3 cup pasta sauce, 1/4 cup shredded mozzarella cheese, 1/3 cup mushrooms, a handful of spinach, torn into small pieces, and four tablespoons of ricotta cheese (dotted over the top of the spinach), and enough zucchini slices to cover the ingredients. Spread the ingredients so they are evenly layered. Repeat layers to the depth the dish allows, ending with a layer of zucchini, sauce, ricotta cheese and mozzarella cheese.

Bake 45 minutes.

Let stand and couple of minutes before cutting. Catherine found using a chef’s knife to cut the layers works best to cut through the zucchini without destroying the layers. Serve with a fresh salad and warm, Italian garlic bread.

Note: We went light on the cheeses, which gave each square of lasagna about 1 serving each of the cheeses. If you like a heavier cheese taste, add more cheese on each layer.

Serve the lasagna with a fresh green salad and some yummy Italian bread and you have a complete meal.

After the dishes are done and you’re ready to relax, download Can’t Stop the Music (The Soul Mate Tree Book 2 and take a trip back to Woodstock 1969 with our heroine Rose and her Italian stallion Dakota. To whet your appetite, here’s a peek at Rose and Dakota’s first meeting. Enjoy!

 


 As they made their way to the festival site, Rose and her friends grooved to the music coming from the stage.

 When they reached the makeshift bridge over the road, someone yelled, “Hey beautiful! You with the red hair.”

She looked around to see if there was anyone else with red hair. Then she glanced up and spotted two guys, one blond and the other dark-haired, leaning over the side of the bridge.

“Yeah, you,” the blond called out as he caught her gaze.

Willow halted beside her. “He’s cute. How about him?”

Rose looked away, her gaze landing on the other guy.

He jabbed his companion in the ribs. “Quit trying to pick up every girl you see.” Then he leaned farther over the rail. “Don’t pay any attention to him. He’s high.”

“So she’s not beautiful?” Willow yelled to the hippie.

She poked her friend. “Stop it, Willow, you’re making a scene.” In spite of her protest, her gaze remained on the dark-haired guy.

He rested his elbows on the rail and stared back at her. The intensity of his expression shot heat into her belly.

“I didn’t say that, just that she shouldn’t pay attention to him.” He flapped a hand at his blond buddy, then tapped his own chest with his thumb several times as if to say, ‘Choose me!’

Does he want me to pay attention to him? Her heart thumped in rhythm to his jabbing thumb.

“Take that one,” Willow whispered. “He’s the real cutie.”

Before she could respond, the crowd pushed them forward. When they reached the other side of the bridge, she looked back, searching for the dark-haired hippie, but the spot where he’d stood was empty.

Just my luck. I see someone who’s intriguing and he disappears.

With a sigh, she continued the trek to the festival grounds.

 

 


C.D. Hersh–Two hearts creating everlasting love stories.

Putting words and stories on paper is second nature to co-authors C.D. Hersh. They’ve written separately since they were teenagers and discovered their unique, collaborative abilities in the mid-90s. As high school sweethearts and husband and wife, Catherine and Donald believe in true love and happily ever after.

They have a short Christmas story, Kissing Santa, in a Christmas anthology titled Sizzle in the Snow: Soul Mate Christmas Collection, with seven other authors. Plus their paranormal series titled The Turning Stone Chronicles.

They are looking forward to many years of co-authoring and book sales, and a lifetime of happily-ever-after endings on the page and in real life.

Join them on social media:

Website

Soul Mate Publishing

Facebook

Amazon Author Page

Twitter

 

#Woodstock, #Love, #Food, #Magic, #Paranormal, #Mushrooms, #Zucchini, #Lasagna, #Can’tStoptheMusic, #TheSoulMateTree, #CatherineCastle, #DonaldHersh, #CDHersh

Saturday, November 5, 2022

OH BOY! PO’ BOY!

 


 From Linda Lee Greene, Author/Artist

 

It has been far too long since I have been in New Orleans, one of my favorite vacation cities in the USA. One of my best experiences in Nola was a cooking class in which I learned the basics of some of the city’s famous dishes, as well as the difference between Louisiana’s Cajun and Creole cuisines. They are often mistakenly thought to be the same, mainly because they do comprise many ingredients in common. “Creole” is still used to describe the heritage and customs, including the cuisine, of the various people who actually settled Louisiana. They were primarily black as well as mixed-race people chiefly of French and/or Spanish colonial origin. Cajun cooking appeared forty years later with the influx of refugees from Acadia (French: Acadie), which was a colony of New France in northeastern North America. Acadia included parts of what are now the Maritime Provinces of Canada, the Gaspé Peninsula of Canada and Maine to the Kennebec River of Maine. The population of Acadia included the various Indigenous First Nations (groups of Canadian Indigenous people who are classified as distinct from the Inuit and Métis), the Acadian people originally from southeastern France, and other French settlers. Acadia was eventually divided into British colonies, and the British deported the people from Acadia during the French and Indian War. They settled in rural parts of southern Louisiana.

The extreme change in climate forced the Louisiana Acadians to abandon many of their original culinary traditions. In their place arose what is now considered classic Cajun cuisine, which is rustic rather than elaborate, pulled together with locally available ingredients, and is simple in preparation and presentation. It is not to be confused with Prudhomme’s style of spicy and sumptuous Cajun cooking. While many modern-day restaurants use the Prudhomme style of “Louisiana cooking,” in-home cooking closely approximates that of the earliest Cajun settlers, oftener than not.  

It is generally accepted that New Orleans is a Creole town rather than Cajun. The underlying premise is that Creole culture and cuisine “is of the city” and Cajun “is of the country.” And if tomatoes are cooked into your jambalaya or étouffée or any other New Orleans dish, you know its Creole rather than proper Cajun.

           If you have been fortunate enough to tantalize your tastebuds with a Po’ Boy Sandwich, then you have experienced the flavor of Cajun fare. The history of the French Quarter’s most sought-after sandwich is as varied and plentiful as the ingredients that go into it. However, the most accepted version of its origin harkens back to 1929 when during that Great Depression year, the former streetcar drivers and brothers Clovis and Benjamin Martin, who became restauranteurs, invented and served the inexpensive sandwich to striking streetcar workers. At the appearance of a striker at the back door of the restaurant on St. Claude Avenue, a cry would go out from a kitchen worker, “Here comes another poor boy!” Thus was born the name of the sandwich.

              At lunchtime, my vacation companions and I often headed over to 511 St. Louis Street and elbowed our way in and among the cheery crowd at Johnny’s Po-Boys “joint.” There at tables clad in red-and-white-checkered table cloths, or sometimes at the countertop, each of us wolfed-down our sandwich. 

 


A great authentic Cajun recipe for a Shrimp Po’ Boy Sandwich, or any other derivation of the sandwich such as roast beef, pork, oyster, shellfish, ham and cheese, and more is at https://www.simplyrecipes.com/recipes/shrimp_po_boy_sandwich/. Take note that once you add the tomatoes, you’ve gone a little bit Creole. To nobody’s surprise, in this city of weekly festivals there is one devoted to the Po’ Boy, normally held in late-October or mid- to late-November. Dubbed the ‘Oak Street Po’ Boy Festival’, it was organized to breathe new life into Nola’s rich culture after Hurricane Katrina devastated the city. The one-day festival showcases over 60 variations of the sandwich from various restaurants with a backdrop of live music and arts and crafts. It kicks off with a Friday-night party and bar-crawl. Just Google ‘Oak Street Po-Boy Festival’ or visit www.poboyfest.com to obtain the latest information about the festival.©

 



 

***

Linda Lee Greene’s novella, GARDEN OF THE SPIRITS OF THE POTS, A Spiritual Odyssey, is a blend of visionary and inspirational fiction with a touch of romance. It is a tale of ex-pat American Nicholas Plato’s journey into parts unknown, in New Orleans, in Sydney, Australia, which is his final destination, and in his himself, a quest that in the end leads him to his true purpose for living.

It is available in eBook and/or paperback. Just click the following link/URL and it will take you straight to the page on Amazon on which you can purchase it.

https://www.amazon.com/GARDEN-SPIRITS-POTS-SPIRITUAL-ODYSSEY-ebook/dp/B09JM7YL6F/

 


NewOrleans, #Nola, #Creole, #Cajun, #CookingClass, #PoBoysSandwich, #Johnny’sPoBoys, #SydneyAustralia, #SimplyRecipes, #GardenoftheSpiritsofthePots, #LindaLeeGreene